pikespeakmtnman
Pre-takeoff checklist
m.krdo.com/news/deaths-confirmed-in-small-plane-crash-near-colorado-springs-airport/36344490
RIP
Sent from my SM-G900P using Tapatalk
RIP
Sent from my SM-G900P using Tapatalk
Right off departure end 35L
Sent from my SM-G900P using Tapatalk
How far is that from the airport?
Right off departure end 35L
Hmm, interesting one, the report quoted witnesses but no mention of "the engine didn't sound right/stalled". Do we know where he was from and if it was turboed?
I thought I read where he reported engine trouble
Ahh, hadn't seen. Shame, was he taking off West?
It's in the third post of this thread.
Sounds like they should have pulled the chute.
N752C registered in Roanoke, TX
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2015/11/cirrus-sr22-fatal-accident-occurred.html
Sure seems like some good off-field landing spots where he went down. Wonder what happened. RIP.
35L not so much, but not worse.
35L is only 11,000 feet long with another couple thousand feet clear. Turn 90 degrees and it's flat land....
Not going to say anything other than a bad day that may have been preventable...
Been a long time, I remembered the right being clear off the end, and left not so much. Either way, it didn't end well.
Damn....
They are dropping like flies this year...
For the rest of us, REVIEW and PRACTICE your emergency procedures. This brings home yet again this can happen to any one of us.
Always a bummer. Seems to support the case for being trigger happy with CAPS.
Or train yourself to PUSH the nose down first when you lose the engine.
This all goes back to the "impossible" turn which, as I said in the other thread, isn't actually impossible.
But when you make that split second decision you are all in, committed to making a maximum performance maneuver with very little elbow room. At the point where you see you're not quite going to make it the instinctive pull to try and nudge just a bit more out of it might be near impossible to resist. This has happened to seasoned, well trained pilots as much as to not so seasoned pilots and honestly I don't think an additional instrument or a pleasant recorded woman's voice calmly telling you that you are going "too slow" is going to make much difference at that point. You are on the edge, pushing the limit and it all happens in an instant.
Bob Hoover's advice on the matter is probably still the best:
Fly the airplane as far into the crash as possible.